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The Poet and the Murderer: A True Story of Verse, Violence and the Art of Forgery [Paperback]

Simon Worrall
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Book Description

4 Sep 2009

The true story of a brilliantly forged Emily Dickinson poem sold at Sotheby’s in 1997. The author’s detective work led him across America to a prison cell in Salt Lake City, where the world’s greatest literary forger, Mark Hofmann, is serving a life sentence for double-murder.

When the author sets out on the trail of a forged Emily Dickinson poem that has mysteriously turned up for sale at Sotheby’s in New York, he finds himself drawn into a world of deception and murder. The trail eventually leads, via the casinos of Las Vegas, to Utah and the darkly compelling world of Mark Hofmann, ex-Mormon and one of the most daring literary forgers and remorseless murderers of all time. As the author uncovers Hofmann’s brilliant, and disturbing, career, he takes the reader into the secret world of the Mormon Church and its controversial founder, Joseph Smith.

Deeply researched but with the narrative pace of a novel, Worrall’s investigation into the life and crimes of this charismatic genius is a real-life detective story you simply won’t be able to put down. On the way, you will meet an eclectic cast of characters: undercover detectives and rare book dealers, Dickinson scholars, forensic document experts, hypnotists, gun-dealers and Mormons.

As the story reaches its gripping climax, Hofmann becomes trapped in the web of his own deceptions … and turns to murder.


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Product details

  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Fourth Estate; New Ed edition (4 Sep 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 184115587X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1841155876
  • Product Dimensions: 19.8 x 1.7 x 12.9 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 230,222 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Amazon Review

Simon Worrall's The Poet and the Murderer centres around the auction at Sotheby's in 1997 of the manuscript of a hitherto unknown poem by the reclusive 19th-century American poet Emily Dickinson. The buyer was the Jones Library in the poet’s home town of Amherst, Massachusetts. The poem was not written by Emily Dickinson. It was the work of Utah-born Mark Hoffman who has some claims to be the most remarkable literary forger in history. Before he turned to classic American poets, Hoffman had specialised in conning the Mormon Church into believing that documents he had concocted in his home laboratory were original records of its early, beleaguered history in the 1820s and 1830s. His Mormon forgeries, and his later literary forgeries, were so skilful that platoons of experts queued up to vouch for their authenticity. Hoffman, however, was an arrogant chancer who could not resist playing one group of people off against another. Eventually his scheming became so convoluted that the only way out of the maze he had created for himself was murder.

He was much less successful as a murderer than as a forger. He was arrested, convicted and imprisoned years before his Dickinson poem was bought by the Jones Library. More through luck than anything else, the Dickinson forgery was discovered. There is no knowing how many other Hoffman forgeries are in libraries and collections around the world, assumed to be the real thing. By any standards, this in an extraordinary story and Simon Worrall, despite occasional lapses into clichéd tabloid journalese, tells it well. His book is a riveting account of greed, gullibility and the warped talents of a man driven to re-write Mormon and literary history.--Nick Rennison --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review

‘A cracking tale: the labyrinthine story he uncovers is beautifully paced and as complex as any conspiracy theory: a work of non-fiction, it reads like a thriller.’ Observer

‘Utterly enthralling’ Simon Winchester, author of ‘The Professor and the Madman’

‘A terrific story, terrifically told’ New York Daily News

‘An adventurous and sensational narrative’ Peter Ackroyd, The Times


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4.0 out of 5 stars Useful account 28 April 2013
Format:Kindle Edition
Good account of the story of one Mark Hofmann forgery - the Emily Dickinson letter. Also good on the religious background to Hofmann. A little weak on his other non-Mormon forgeries and written in a slightly Tabloid style. Worth reading to help get a rounded view of Mark Hofmann
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6 of 9 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A Racy Read 19 Sep 2002
By "dogos"
Format:Hardcover
The Poet and the Murderer is a racy account of the life of the world's greatest forger, Mark Hofmann, now languishing in prison for murder. Hofmann specialised in forging ancient documents of historic or literary interest. He not only wanted to make a killing at their auction, he was pursuing his own agenda trying to do a demolition job on his parents' Church of the Latter Day Saints, the Mormons. Simon Worrall draws us into the story with a narrative that reads like an exciting novel.

It seems that Hofmann used his brilliant mind to create "original" documents, whether early Mormon texts with a twist which discredits the faith, or seemingly original poems such as the manuscript of Emily Dickenson's That God cannot be understood, sold by Sothebys as pristine, fully cheched out and accredited. He was an exceptionally good forger and the story explores how he achieved such fine skill and hoodwinked so many experts. The poem too had a Hofmann twist by implying a rather atheistic leaning to America's most loved poet. Fascinating, is the account Worrall gives of the highly dubious behaviour of the ancient auction house, Sothebys, as he takes us through the critical analysis, doubts and worries, of the joung librarian who bought it for the library of Emily Dickenson's home town. Worrall no doubt did a lot of research to unveil this story, but it is not scholarship that leaps off the page but rather a gripping tale that is difficult to put down.

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7 of 14 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Ok, but.... 7 Sep 2002
Format:Hardcover
If you read the "dialogue" with Simon Worrall, you get an almost accurate depiction of how we Emily Dickinson scholars feel about the book. Many of us were involved in the forgery in some way, myself included, and for us it is an intensely personal experience. Worrall's portrayal of Dickinson is outdated and he doesn't seem to have done research on the work written about her in the 1980s and later--he relied on a biography that, while still very important, has been corrected and supplanted in part. This book is an interesting read, it's certainly an interesting case, but it should not be read as a representation of Dickinson as many scholars now see her. There are several errors also. I'm a little uncomfortable with the portrayal of Dan Lombardo because it makes him out to be a kind of Romantic hero and he's not. He was very dedicated to the Dickinson collection and did just what he should have done. His embarrassment is understandable, but everyone involved knew that it wasn't his fault. Worrall doesn't point out that Margaret Freeman, a Dickinson scholar, doubted the authenticity of the poem from the start. She said quite clearly that she didn't believe it was Dickinson. Sotheby's is entirely to blame for what happened. This is a good read for a rainy day but it's not going into the annuls of Dickinsonia.
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